Sheesh, another my film is too curly thread. Keep it on the hanger and weight the end, dry for 24 hours. Hang it in the shower after you steam it(the shower, not the film) for a few minutes, close the door and let it stay muggy in the room while drying. Press the cut film between the pages of a heavy tome.

when you say "curls lengthwise" do you mean it curls around the long axis of the film? In other words, opposite edges of the film end up curling towards each other. Some of my homemade developers do that to my film and hanging with a weight does nothing to help.

I have this problem. Allowing it to dry slowly seems to help a little but still pretty curly. The only thing I can do is just let it dry, put it in negative sleeves and let it sit for few months... They will eventually flatten out. Some film tends to curl more than others. Besides it being annoying, it really does no harm in enlargers.

The malady the OP is obviously refering to is called "cupping". The cause is the emulsion layer being a different substance than the base of the film, when dried it shrinks more than the base material. I have a feeling that some with this excessive problem have probably left the film in liquid for longer than necessary, causing more expansion initially, resulting in excessive shrinkage upon drying. I shoot Chinese film that most complain that it cups and curls, but have personally experienced minimal signs of it, Foma does exhibit some tendency, Ilford, Fuji, and Kodak almost none in my experience.